CARDOSO, ISAAC (FERNANDO). Philosophia Libera

AUCTION 32 | Thursday, March 23rd, 2006 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Autographed Letters, Manuscripts, Graphics and Ceremonial Art

Back to Catalogue Download Catalogue

Lot 157
(MEDICINE)

CARDOSO, ISAAC (FERNANDO). Philosophia Libera

FIRST EDITION. Latin text. Large allegorical engraving on title by A. Bosio after Lafeur. Title printed in red and black. Several ornamental woocut headpieces and initials. Printed in double columns pp.(16), 758, (20). Stains. Modern blind-stamped calf in earlier style. Folio Fürst I, 143

Venice: Bertanorum 1673

Est: $4,000 - $6,000
A huge encyclopedic tome ranging from natural philosophy to theology, it was “the first major work in general philosophy to be written and published by a professing Jew in a secular language, and intended from the outset to reach a wide European audience.” Y.H. Yerushalmi, From Spanish Court to Italian Ghetto (1981), p.300. The first four books deal extensively with the physical world of cosmology, astronomy, meteorology and metallurgy. The fifth book deals with zoology and biology, with sections on the four temperaments and the five senses. The sixth book, entitled “De homine,” starts with a eulogy on the dignity of man in the best Renaissance style, followed by a wealth of medical material. The last book focuses on theology Born in 1603 to a New Christian family of crypto-Jews in Trancoso, Portugal, Cardoso studied in Spain, first at the famed University of Salamanca, and later at the University of Valladolid, where from the precocious age of twenty, he taught philosophy. Eventually, he became a physician at the Madrid court of Philip IV. In 1648, Isaac and his younger brother Abraham suddenly disappeared from Madrid, resurfacing in the Ghetto of Venice as professing Jews. See Y.H. Yerushalmi in: Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana-Treasures of Jewish Booklore (1994) p.48